Pathways from nucleation to raindrops
Florian Poydenot, Bruno Andreotti

TL;DR
This paper investigates the mechanisms behind raindrop formation, emphasizing the role of specific size ranges and interactions like van der Waals and electrostatic forces, and identifies four pathways leading to rain.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the physical pathways and critical size ranges that govern raindrop formation, challenging the primacy of gravity and thermal diffusion.
Findings
Raindrop formation is dominated by interactions in the 3-30 μm size range.
Four pathways to rain are identified: coalescence, mixing, electrostatic, and turbulence.
The turbulence pathway is unlikely to be significant in rain initiation.
Abstract
Cloud droplets grow via vapor condensation and collisional aggregation. Upon reaching approximately , their inertia allows them to capture smaller droplets during descent, initiating rain. Here, we show that raindrop formation is not primarily governed by gravity or thermal diffusion, but by a critical range of drop sizes () where collisions are largely ineffective and controlled by van der Waals and electrostatic interactions. We identify four pathways to rain. The coalescence pathway, which is slow, involves the broadening of the drop size distribution across the low-efficiency gap through collisions, until enough large individual droplets achieving efficient collisions have formed. The mixing pathway, which is faster, requires mixing at the cloud top with drop-free, cold, humid air to create locally supersaturated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTextile materials and evaluations
